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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Name that Mars rover

Posted: Friday, January 23, 2009 1:37 PM by Alan Boyle


NASA / JPL / Corby Waste
Hey, kids: Here's your last chance to name NASA's Mars Science Laboratory.

OK, kids: You have only one more weekend to come up with a name for NASA's next Mars rover. I've got some ideas, but it's up to you to write the essay and take this opportunity to make your mark on another planet. Although the contest is for kids only, even grown-ups can play a part in naming the Mars Science Laboratory - and you don't have to be a kid to enjoy the latest goodies from NASA's 5-year-old Red Planet rovers.

The naming contest is open to kids aged 5 to 18 who are registered students at U.S. schools. Your suggested name, plus an essay explaining the reason for the name, must be received by 11:59 p.m. ET Monday. Judges will sort through the entries and select nine finalists for consideration by the public in late March.

That's when the grown-ups have a say: A "Public Poll" will be posted on the contest Web site in late May, and the public input will be one of the factors used to determine the winning name. The grand prize is a three-day, two-night trip to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Disneyland for the winner plus up to three other family members.

JPL has the option of letting the winner sign his or her name on the rover itself. But NASA won't be obligated to use the name you come up with if it doesn't work out. Check out the contest rules for all the details.

If I were a kid again, I'd make a case for naming the darn thing Darwin. After all, the Mars Science Laboratory is built to roam around the Martian landscape and look for evidence that the planet was once potentially habitable. That blend of geology and biology would have been appealing to British naturalist Charles Darwin.

Another option would be to name the rover Beagle, after the ship that took Darwin on his famous voyage. (The name "Beagle 3" would pay tribute as well to Beagle 2, the European Mars lander that was lost in 2003.)

It's just too bad that the mission's launch had to be delayed. It would have been doubly fitting if the laboratory were sent out into space during the 200th anniversary of Darwin's birth and the 150th anniversary of "On the Origin of Species."

The names that were given to NASA's twin Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, have worked out better than I originally thought - and that's a tribute to Sofi Collis, who came up with those names when she was just 9 years old. In a similar high-flown vein, you could suggest:

  • Resolution: The vessel that took Captain James Cook on his final voyage of discovery, as well as the name of the inflatable moon-style habitat that was recently christened in Antarctica.

  • Revelation: I'm hopeful that the Mars Science Laboratory's mission will bring fresh revelations about past and perhaps even present life on Mars, and I like the nickname Rev the Rover. (I'm also anxious to write the headline "Revvy revs up.") But maybe Revelation sounds a little too apocalyptic, especially considering that it's likely to land on Mars in (gasp!) 2012.

But those are enough names from me ... feel free to add your own suggestions as comments below. There's no age limit. And while you meditate on your moniker, have a look at the latest 3-D picture from NASA's Opportunity rover, released just in time to mark the fifth anniversary of its landing.


For more about the rover anniversary, check out this posting from earlier in the month, plus our "Return to the Red Planet" archive.

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Comments

Call it Jesus.
Not Obama or Barrack or any of the Obama family - when the guy is successful lets then talk about naming stuff after him but he is barely on the job with a bunch of ideas we don't know will work.
PLUGGER
As an appropriately aged young adult, I submitted my idea and supporting essay. Thanks Alan for tipping me off to this. And no, I'm not going to say what I suggested. Just be forewarned that my submission is going to win.
Name it Jorge, like me.
I Think it should be named ( OBAMA1) America on a misson...Russ
I was trying to think of an explorer's basecamp that evokes the spirit of the Mars missions.  What I came up with was:  Agua Pulgas (Water Flea)  becuase its looking for water and for evidence of past microscopic life.  
remote viewer
Popover One
Let's name it W. after the "great" president we just spent eight years living under. :P
  OPOSSUM IS THE NAME.
Bob H An earthly vehicle roving on martian teritory should be named Marver
How about  BAROCKMOBILE........ After your first AFRICAN AMERICAN PRESIDENT......
call it "maiden china" because by the time mars will be accessible china will own everything anyway.
On Mars,the name should be "Marcy" plain, simple and befitting.
I'd call it: E T !   Because it looks a bit like the movie character, and also because just these two letters could save some printing ink, on NASA printouts!
E. T.  Because the rover looks somewhat like the film character, anbd also because it would save printer's ink and toner, for NASA, instead of a longer name.

COMMENT 2:  W H Y aren't people OVER high-school age allowed to enter?????  There are some quite good respnses here, and I'm pretty sure most are from post-high school age people.  Science is, after all, always expanding life expentancy.  Does graduating high school, or passing high-school graduation age, mean you lose your imagination?  I SAY NOT!!!!
Wall-E
Rod the Rover, namesake for Gene Roddenberry
You should name it "Harpo Marx" after the greatest comedian of all time. He will make you laugh at all of the weird and crazy martians out there.
"It has to be "Ray" as in Ray Bradberry, author of "The Martian Chronicles"!"

Or as in Ray Walston of 'My Favorite Martian...'

(Okay, I'll shut up)
Golombek "the dove"
because Matt Golombek helped with rover and also happens to be my sons' name also.
Cosmic crabs
Mars Space Shuttle Rocket
I agree with Amanda Schelly from Dallas.
Wall-E is great. I mean, just LOOK at that rover!
name it Trishna meaning thirst in sanskrit
Columbia to honor those that perished in the tradgey.
R1D1  or C2PO
I vote for "Dejah Thoris", the name of Edgar Rice Burrough's "Princess of Mars". As the princess of the red Martians Helium Kingdom, she was beautiful and fearless.
Spot should be left to those probes exploring Jupiter.  I would suggest Dusty since Mars is; it is also a reference to the G.I.Joe who was trained in desert survival.  Mars is very much a desert.
Perseverance , following Viking, Pathfinder, Spirit & Opportunity.
I think it should be named the Link because doesn't it "link" pictures to Nasa.
How about we call it "Two years late"...
hi  this  is   Heather Forrester  
i  think  the  name  of  the  new  Mars rover
should  be  Mara2youview nother words  Mars  2 years
you  view
name it opportunity


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